How high did the shuttle fly to Hubble?
Table of Contents
How high did the shuttle fly to Hubble?
STS-125
Spacecraft properties | |
---|---|
Apogee altitude | 578 kilometres (359 mi) |
Inclination | 28.5° |
Period | 97 min |
Capture of Hubble |
Why did NASA stop flying the space shuttle?
While reentering Earth’s atmosphere, Columbia broke apart, killing the entire crew. All of these factors — high costs, slow turnaround, few customers, and a vehicle (and agency) that had major safety problems — combined to make the Bush administration realize it was time for the Space Shuttle Program to retire.
What is the altitude of the space shuttle 30 minutes before landing?
about 400,000 feet
Approximately 30 minutes before touchdown, the orbiter begins entering the atmosphere at an altitude of about 400,000 feet (121,920 meters). At approximately 45,000 feet (13,716 meters), the orbiter starts maneuvers that enable it to intercept the landing approach corridor at the desired altitude and velocity.
How high above the Earth does the HST orbit?
The Hubble Space Telescope is a large telescope in space. It was launched into orbit by space shuttle Discovery on April 24, 1990. Hubble orbits about 547 kilometers (340 miles) above Earth. It is the length of a large school bus and weighs as much as two adult elephants.
How heavy was the space shuttle?
4.4 million pounds
The entire shuttle vehicle, fully loaded, weighed about 2 million kg (4.4 million pounds) and required a combined thrust of about 35 million newtons (7.8 million pounds-force) to reach orbital altitude.
How fast is the space shuttle on re entry?
Typical low earth re-entry speed: 17,500 mph. Escape velocity for space shuttle to enter orbit from earth around 25,000mph. New Horizon Space probe during its visit at Pluto: more than 52,000 mph.
Why is the James Webb mirror yellow?
The primary operating light for the James Webb is in the infrared region. The mirror reflector surface is chosen for its high performance with the intended light. Gold is a very good reflector of infrared – far better than, say, the aluminium reflector used on Hubble.